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4 year oldTrump had posted two tweets on Tuesday morning claiming that there is “NO WAY (ZERO!)” that mail-in ballots “will be anything less than substantially fraudulent,” denouncing the drive by Democrats to expand voting by mail in November.
Twitter reacted later in the day by tagging both with a “Get the facts about mail-in ballots” link, leading to a collection of mainstream media articles denouncing the president’s claim as false.
“Trump falsely claimed that mail-in ballots would lead to ‘a Rigged Election.’ However, fact-checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud,” the platform wrote by way of an explanation.
Trump denounced the move as an act of interference in the 2020 presidential election.
Twitter is completely stifling FREE SPEECH, and I, as President, will not allow it to happen!
.@Twitter is now interfering in the 2020 Presidential Election. They are saying my statement on Mail-In Ballots, which will lead to massive corruption and fraud, is incorrect, based on fact-checking by Fake News CNN and the Amazon Washington Post....
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 26, 2020
The first statement Twitter has declared “false” is a non-falsifiable opinion pic.twitter.com/Z2cfHWLpGo
— Will Chamberlain (@willchamberlain) May 26, 2020
So is @Twitter going to start censoring & fact-checking all the numerous blue check mark "journalists" & leftwing activists who falsely claimed that the Trump campaign colluded with the Russian government & that @realDonaldTrump is a "puppet" of Putin for the past 4 years? ?? https://t.co/HqZ4mAMUvC
— Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr) May 26, 2020
The Trump 2020 campaign also weighed in, revealing that it pulled all advertising from Twitter “months ago” due to the platform’s “clear political bias.”
“Partnering with the biased fake news media ‘fact checkers’ is only a smoke screen Twitter is using to try to lend their obvious political tactics some false credibility,” said campaign manager Brad Parscale.
President Trump has long used Twitter as his social medium of choice, leveraging the platform to directly reach US voters ahead of the 2016 presidential election and bypassing the mainstream media that overwhelmingly supported his opponent. After the election, the media and Democrats put enormous pressure on social platforms to censor, ban, expel and “fact-check” opinions they disagreed with.
The latest round of pressure to censor Trump on the platform came after he tweeted about former friend and now outspoken critic ‘Morning Joe’ Scarborough, insinuating that the 2001 death of his congressional intern may not have been an accident. The media denounced it as a “baseless conspiracy theory” and demanded something be done, culminating with a Tuesday oped by a liberal New York Times columnist declaring that “Twitter must cleanse the Trump stain.”
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